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Your work experience is already a good substitute for medical research. Clinical experience is your deficit.5. Do you think doing software engineering in a medical lab might be a substitute for research (which I lack)? Here is an excerpt from a HMS one I saw:
You will work with investigators from the Patel Group and Arjun Manrai, faculty members at HMS DBMI and build tools and computer infrastructure to enhance use of large and disparate datasets from the domains of biology and population health to enable precision medicine. The goal of our efforts is to usher in a new age of precision medicine through combining lab, ancestry, demographic, environmental, and genetic data to enable accurately classify disease and health that accounts for the diversity of the human population.
I generally think it'd be interesting to work on this, however I assume it will come with quite a pay cut--not to mention it might be more competitive. An industry job would be what I'm more used to, however it would tip the scale if a medical lab job would open more doors for med school.
6. Oh definitely, I didn't want to make it sound like I'd be a shoo-in for those CA schools, the 2 I mention are definitely hard and I'd be luck to get UCSD, Davis, or Irvine. I just wanted to set my goals high.
Thanks for the input!
Ahh I did a bad job of anonymizing myself haha, go card! Good to hear that you had a good experience with our Top 5 on quarters school, I get worried because I know a lot of my friends who had a lot of trouble getting in. There's actually a story posted on the Berkeley extension school about a girl, Leslie Cachola (sorry I can't link yet), who had a very hard time getting in--I'm hoping it was because her stats were on the lower end. But yeah hope it's like you said, that a great MCAT will do it because I feel like it's something I can control now.
Definitely agree, the only reason I chose HES was because of location, flexibility, quality of education, and cost. The location was the most important because it is in Boston, a city with great health care opportunities.
Thanks again!
I guess I have already worked at health care companies and feel like working in a lab could also count as research, with potentially good recommendations? But yeah, I definitely currently have more of a product/infrastructure story and can build on that more, but thought medical labs would give me more of an edge (also am interested in trying it). Will think about this more and ask advisors.
Yeah I don't want to sound like an elitist haha. The main reason I asked about top 10 is that I wanted to gauge how competitive I was for the most competitive schools to see if I had a chance with the next tier as well.
The in-state CA thing is more on tuition, not ease at which I can get in (bummer). My understanding is to be considered in-state you have to have lived a year in the state prior to matriculating, does this mean immediately prior? I've lived in CA for almost all my life (even have property in Southern California. if I move to Boston for 3 years and apply to CA schools, I'm still in-state right?
Thanks again!
Im going to go against the grain here.
1. Be sure you want medicine. Medicine can be just as soulless as a programming gig.
I would shadow a few physicians and get a good idea, it looks great from the outside , but the day to day is what you should look at.
2. Medicine will impact your relationships, family starting etc. It is difficult to have everything due to the demands of training. take this into consideration when making the leap.
3. Go to a post bac that is either linked to medical school or has a history of placing a majority of their students. Harvard sounds great on paper but buyer beware considering it might be difficult making straight A's there and it may not give you an added bump at the end of the day.
4. I would personally move to a state which has many medical schools that offer IS advantage or where the bar is lower compared to others states to get in. You want to set yourself up to matriculate incase your performance is mediocre on the mcat or post bac.
5. You are probably forgoing 1-2 million dollars+ in lost income making this transition and delaying retirement, and sacrificing hobbies and free time that many people take for granted. Make sure you are ok with that .
I cannot stress enough the importance of knowing what you are getting into see the underbelly and if you still want to move forward good luck. I am sure you are a good test taker and capable of getting it, its just that nothing is certaain in this process and there are many examples of people not getting in with steller records or requiring multiple applicaiton cycles, if you do decide you should maximize your chances by implementing some of the points I made above.
Thanks for the advice! Will definitely take it to heart.
1. Yep, I agree from the outside the medicine profession looks peachy. However, I come in with the knowledge that it is not that, and you're right, I'll have to see what it's really like. But as a poster above has said, I don't know if it's just as soulless. I think it can be, but from talking to people I can see a crevice within the medicine field in which I might fit and find light. I struggled to find that in software. But will definitely shadow and get the most observational experience I can before 'diving' all in.
2. Definitely agree with your advice on families, I know it's going to be a sacrifice, and I'd like to start one but don't need it. If I am lucky to have kids, I'd like to tell them that their old man followed what he thought was right.
3. Hmm I was listening to a podcast and the dean of admissions said the linkage program alone was not a good reason to enroll in a postbac. I think he said it's because you're linking to a program that you didn't really choose, and you didn't get an opportunity to try out other ones that would be a better fit. I think I'm coming in with the mindset that I'd rather find a place where I think I can fit in and be the best physician I can given my skills than to just to get in to any med school. If that means I don't get in, then maybe I wasn't meant to do it and so be it. I guess what I'm saying is, if I needed a linkage to get in and I couldn't do it the harder way, I probably wasn't meant for it.
4. So I'm actually not moving to Boston for Harvard, I chose it for the health care opportunities specifically for my field. Harvard Medical School, Gates Medical Research, the Amazon/JP/Berkshire venture by Atul Gawande are all around Boston, not to mention other non-profits that I've recently followed as well as many health care startup companies. I want to do something within software and at the very least connect with bright health care minds as well and maybe further on, so this was what drew me to the area. It just was icing on the cake that there was a flexible, high caliber and very affordable option in Harvard Extension school. I wanted to emphasize again, I didn't choose that for the name brand and I'm trying really hard to downplay my elitism 😛
5. Yep, I did the calculations and $1-2 million is on the lower end. I am ashamed that money has been such a strong motivator for me in the past. Doctors make enough for my comfort style (minimalist and super frugal), I think I'm mainly concerned whether it's a calling.
Thanks again, really appreciate that. A lot of your sentiments are things that I have known as well, it's nice to hear it again and keep it in the back of my mind. I haven't decided to go all in yet, and those concerns will be in the back of my mind throughout.
I agree that it is not all soulless but people can fall into situations or institutions where it definitely feels like it, but I have seen people become jaded and treat it as such. And fields like rads, path, may limit patient interaction.As a former software engineer who just finished internal medicine residency, I agree with this somewhat. At the end of the day, medicine has its frustrations just like any other job (insurance, paperwork, politics, there are many things you have to do even though you don't want to, etc.). But I disagree that it is "just as soulless as a programming gig." The amount of interpersonal interaction in medicine is significantly higher compared to software engineering; the relationships with patients can be much more gratifying than anything in software; and it's very satisfying to make the right diagnosis and see patients get better (though also very humbling to miss diagnoses, as I did time and again in residency, and to learn that for many of our sickest patients, sometimes the only thing to do is focus on maximizing comfort and ensuring a good death).
I agree, though, that it's important to try to understand the downsides of being a doctor as much as possible. It's great that you went to Stanford, because there are a lot of Stanford alumni in the Boston area who are doctors. I'd recommend using the Stanford alumni website (and your personal network) to meet as many of them as you can for informational interviews (i.e., buy them coffee/lunch and talk to them) about what they like and don't like about their jobs. Try to do this for as wide a range of specialties and practice settings (academic vs. community) as possible, because there is wide variation across specialties/practice settings in factors like hours, pay, patient interaction, intellectual vs. procedural work, etc. And try to shadow widely as well.
Finally, I also agree that there may be a financial downside to going into medicine which is important to (a) calculate for yourself and (b) understand that, even if there is no downside or the amount of downside is acceptable to you, it may be difficult/stressful in a few years to see that your CS undergrad classmates are selling their startups, buying expensive houses, having kids, etc. while you are laboring away in med school, drawing down on savings and building up a sizable debt burden. This was one the unexpectedly hard parts of going to med school for me, though it has definitely got better after med school.
What great advice - Good job SDN!
I just want to throw in one more pitch for Texas, specifically Austin or possibly Houston. There are great tech and medical opportunities here (more tech in Austin, more med in Houston, but plenty of each in both) and the medical school options - particularly for IS residents - are incredible. Plus it's a really great place for former Californians with lots of us to go around. And Tex-Mex beats Cali-Mex hands down ;-)
I have a friend at Baylor who loved it and have family in Houston, it'd be an honor if I could go there for med school. And I personally liked Austin; it had a hipster flair and I met the nicest people. Will definitely look at those schools when the time comes, thanks!
However, for med and health tech no area seems to rival Boston (except maybe Silicon Valley, but I'd argue it's too heavy on the tech and not enough on the medicine).
That's how I found out about it, the podcast.Carle seems like an interesting program! I listened to a podcast from their dean not too long ago. Has many things going for it, I hope it maintains its generous scholarships haha.
I would have gone and stayed in software engineering instead of medicine. If I only knew better. SMH
Currently, Im 28 yo second year psychiatry resident, its too late. I only have 2 more years in terms of being an attending. Im not saying I don't like medicine. I acutally enjoy psychiatry. But earning a good living would have been easier if I went to sofware engineering and with less debt. Im just saying if I was in college as a freshman, I would have picked software engineering if I could go back.It's probably not too late for you the same way it's not too late for software engineers to go to medicine.
Would love to see the converse transition and compare notes. You say if only you knew better, and you might know now that medicine isn't for you, but you don't really know if software is for you until you've tried. I always wonder if it's not a grass is greener on the other side, and the only way to figure that is asking people who've tried both.
Currently, Im 28 yo second year psychiatry resident, its too late. I only have 2 more years in terms of being an attending. Im not saying I don't like medicine. I acutally enjoy psychiatry. But earning a good living would have been easier if I went to sofware engineering and with less debt. Im just saying if I was in college as a freshman, I would have picked software engineering if I could go back.
I would have gone and stayed in software engineering instead of medicine. If I only knew better. SMH